The Standard (St. Catharines)

And the Oscar goes to ....

In which we engage in a little crystal ball gazing before the big Academy Awards show

- CARA BUCKLEY

Cara Buckley covers the awards season for The New York Times and has been closely following the Oscar race this year. Here are her prediction­s of the winners at Sunday’s ceremony.

Picture

Remember last year, when Oscar experts were certain that “La La Land” was the slam-dunk best picture winner, and when they were proven right, until that envelope snafu proved that they had been very wrong? That should serve as a cautionary tale when it comes to heeding forecasts for best picture winners.

This year, experts see a toss-up between “The Shape of Water,” which has the most nomination­s and has won important precursor awards, and “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri,” which also won bellwether awards. It will probably be a squeaker — though by how much, we will almost certainly never know, because the Academy does not release vote tallies.

“Three Billboards” was controvers­ial and paints a less-than-flattering portrait of America. But it stars mighty Frances McDormand, who plays a warrior mother custom-made for #MeToo, and is helped by superb supporting performanc­es. “The Shape of Water” is elegant, dreamy, a fairy tale and parable from Guillermo del Toro about tolerance, cruelty and humanpisci­ne sex; it also pays homage to cinema, which academy members tend to reward. But it did not get much love at the Screen Actors Guild Awards, while “Three Billboards” did, and actors make up the academy’s biggest voting bloc. On the other hand, “Shape” was far less divisive, and, unlike “Three Billboards,” landed a directing nomination. Tossing a coin. The prediction here is “Shape of Water.”

Actress

One of the most common questions put to Frances McDormand’s co-stars from “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri” is whether they were intimidate­d working with her.

(Sam Rockwell said no; Caleb Landry said yes.) As Mildred, a mother whose grief over her daughter’s unsolved murder hardens into vengeance and rage, McDormand is fearsome and unrelentin­g, and as mighty a woman as anyone could hope for in the age of #MeToo. In a different year, any one of McDormand’s fellow nominees — Sally Hawkins, Margot Robbie, Saoirse Ronan or Meryl Streep — might have given her more of a run for her money, but this season it’s a 60-year-old woman unwilling to suffer fools who perfectly meets the moment.

Actor

An actor’s actor, Gary Oldman, 59, is known for his versatilit­y and wholesale, sometimes hammy, immersion into roles that have included Dracula, Beethoven, Sid Vicious, George Smiley, the devil, Lee Harvey Oswald, Sirius Black, Rosencrant­z and Commission­er Gordon. Oldman earned his first Academy Award nomination in 2012 for “Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy,” but it is his portrayal of Winston Churchill in “Darkest Hour” that will almost certainly land him the win. The crucial ingredient­s are there: he plays a historical figure, he has won key precursor awards, and he is up against two whippersna­ppers (Timothée Chalamet and Daniel Kaluuya) who have careers ahead of them, and two veterans (Daniel Day-Lewis and Denzel Washington) who each have already won multiple times.

Supporting Actress

This category boasts a wealth of seasoned heavy hitters — Lesley Manville, Laurie Metcalf, Octavia Spencer — along with Mary J. Blige, in a breakout performanc­e; each woman played an indomitabl­e character. But it was Allison Janney’s unflinchin­g performanc­e as LaVona Golden, mother of disgraced figure skater Tonya Harding, that won prize after prize this season. Often a wise, warm, empathic onscreen presence, the 58-year-old Janney as LaVona was caustic and cruel, and almost upstaged by the pet bird that sat on her shoulder, pecking at her, for one extended, wickedly funny scene.

Supporting Actor

At 49, Sam Rockwell is the youngest of this year’s supporting actor nominees, who include Christophe­r Plummer, 88, along with Willem Dafoe, Richard Jenkins and Woody Harrelson, who stars as the police chief to Rockwell’s racist, dim-witted officer, Jason Dixon, in “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri.” Rockwell is a master at playing unpredicta­ble, unhinged men, and, because his Dixon undergoes a transforma­tion — which is catnip for academy voters — he was able to show his range. Having already collected a Golden Globe, a Screen Actors Guild Award and a BAFTA, Rockwell’s Oscar success is pretty much guaranteed.

Director

While fans of Guillermo del Toro do not roundly consider the merman gothic fairy tale “The Shape of Water” his best picture — many rank it behind “The Devil’s Backbone” and “Pan’s Labyrinth” — all the momentum is there to secure him the win. “Shape” leads the Oscars race with 13 nomination­s, and Martin McDonagh, director of its biggest competitor for best picture, “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri,” did not manage to get a directing nomination. Del Toro is widely respected and deeply liked, and buoyed by a “his time is now” narrative, along with wins at the Golden Globes, the Directors Guild of America Awards and the BAFTAs.

Documentar­y

Up until the Oscar nomination­s, prognostic­ators had their chips on the documentar­y “Jane,” about primatolog­ist and conservati­onist Jane Goodall. Instead, the academy voted for less sunny films that delved into endemic racism (“Strong Island”), civilian rescuers and medics in the Syrian war (“Last Men in Aleppo”), Russian doping (“Icarus”) and alleged bank fraud (“Abacus: Small Enough to Jail”). Out of the bunch, “Faces Places” stands out for its quirkiness and light, teaming 35-yearold French artist JR, who slathers outsize photos of everyday folks across favelas, water towers and buildings worldwide, with Agnès Varda, now 89, the filmmaker nicknamed the grandmothe­r of the French new wave. The result is an idiosyncra­tic, bitterswee­t and tender film that is the favourite to win.

Original Screenplay

Of all the films nominated for Oscars this year, “Get Out” almost certainly had the most impact, with its unapologet­ic message (white liberals are racist too), box office success ($255 million worldwide on a $4.5 million budget), and four Oscar nomination­s, including best picture, actor and director, a stunning haul for an edgy comedy-horror picture. The film is a long-shot for best picture, and is outmatched in the director and actor categories, but academy members wanting to make sure it wins something will probably reward its writer-director, Jordan Peele, with best screenplay. “Lady Bird” or “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri” could also prevail, but having won best screenplay at the Writers Guild of America Awards, “Get Out” has the edge.

Adapted Screenplay

Even if James Ivory had not won this year’s Writers Guild Award for adapting André Aciman’s gay coming-of-age novel into the Oscar-nominated “Call Me by Your Name,” he would still have been the sentimenta­l favourite here. As one half of the powerhouse filmmaking team Merchant-Ivory, Ivory brought glorious period pieces like “A Room With a View,” “Howard’s End” and “The Remains of the Day” to the screen. Ivory, who is 89 and has been nominated for an Academy Award three times before, is expected to clinch it.

Animated Feature

It is really, really, really hard to beat Pixar. The powerhouse production company has won nine Oscars in the last 10 years, six of them for animated features, including “Wall-E,” “Up” and “Inside Out.” Their visuals are gaspinduci­ng, their storylines reduce adults to tears. “Coco,” about a Mexican boy on a quest tied to the Day of the Dead holiday, proves no exception, while also giving props to Mexico, a country much maligned these days in the United States. This typically wide-ranging category includes “The Breadwinne­r,” which is from the small Irish outfit the Cartoon Saloon and which counts Angelina Jolie among its executive producers; and “The Boss Baby.” But “Coco” will probably triumph.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Allison Janney as LaVona Golden in "I, Tonya." Janney is Cara Buckley’s choice for best supporting actress.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Allison Janney as LaVona Golden in "I, Tonya." Janney is Cara Buckley’s choice for best supporting actress.
 ?? MERRICK MORTON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sam Rockwell in "Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri." Rockwelll is Cara Buckley’s choice for best supporting actor.
MERRICK MORTON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Sam Rockwell in "Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri." Rockwelll is Cara Buckley’s choice for best supporting actor.

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